19 Jan 20233 min read

Gross Exposure Explained: 2026 Guide for Australian Investors

Review your portfolio’s gross exposure today to ensure you’re prepared for 2026’s market challenges—and take control of your investment risk.

Published by

Cockatoo Editorial Team · In-house editorial team

Reviewed by

Louis Blythe · Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

As Australian investors become increasingly sophisticated, understanding the metrics that drive portfolio performance and risk is more important than ever. Gross exposure is one of those metrics that often gets mentioned in professional circles, but what does it really mean, and why should you care—especially in 2026’s rapidly evolving market landscape?

Newsletter

Get new guides and updates in your inbox

Receive weekly Australian home, property, and service-planning insights from the Cockatoo editorial team.

Next step

Review cover options before you switch

Compare policy types, exclusions, and broker pathways with the guide still fresh in mind.

Review cover options

What Is Gross Exposure?

Gross exposure is the total value of both your long and short positions in a portfolio, without netting them off. For example, if you have $500,000 in long positions and $300,000 in short positions, your gross exposure is $800,000, even though your net exposure is only $200,000. Gross exposure measures the total capital at risk—not just your directional bet on the market.

  • Long positions: Buying assets expecting them to rise in value.

  • Short positions: Selling assets you don’t own, betting their price will fall.

  • Gross exposure: Sum of all absolute positions (long + short).

This metric is especially relevant for leveraged funds, hedge funds, and increasingly, for retail investors using sophisticated trading platforms now common in Australia.

Why Gross Exposure Matters in 2026

The investing environment in 2026 is marked by heightened volatility and increased regulatory scrutiny. The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has ramped up its oversight of retail trading platforms, particularly those offering leverage or derivatives. As a result, understanding gross exposure has never been more important:

  • Risk Assessment: Gross exposure gives you a clear sense of the total risk you’re taking on, regardless of your net market view. A portfolio with high gross exposure is more sensitive to market swings, even if net exposure appears modest.

  • Regulatory Reporting: New ASIC guidelines in 2026 require certain funds and managed accounts to disclose gross exposure figures to investors, making transparency a legal and practical necessity.

  • Margin Requirements: Many brokers base their margin requirements on gross, not net, exposure. This affects how much capital you need to set aside and can influence your ability to take on additional trades.

Example: Suppose a managed fund is long $1 million in ASX-listed equities and short $500,000 in index futures. Its gross exposure is $1.5 million, which means market volatility affects it more than a fund with the same net exposure but lower gross exposure.

Gross vs Net Exposure: A Practical Comparison

Investors often confuse gross and net exposure, but they serve different purposes. Net exposure shows your directional bias (bullish or bearish), while gross exposure reveals your overall risk footprint.

| **Scenario** |**Long** |**Short** |**Gross Exposure** |**Net Exposure** | |



| Conservative |$100,000 |$0 |$100,000 |$100,000 | |

| Balanced Long/Short |$200,000 |-$150,000 |$350,000 |$50,000 | |

| Aggressive Leveraged |$500,000 |-$500,000 |$1,000,000 |$0 | |

Notice how two portfolios with the same net exposure can have wildly different gross exposures—and thus, very different risk profiles.

How to Use Gross Exposure in Your Investment Strategy

Gross exposure isn’t just a figure for fund managers; it’s a practical tool for anyone seeking to manage portfolio risk in a dynamic market:

  • Set Exposure Limits: Many professional investors cap gross exposure as a percentage of capital to prevent over-leveraging—an approach retail investors can borrow.

  • Diversify Risk: High gross exposure is acceptable if it’s diversified across uncorrelated assets. Concentrated exposure increases risk exponentially.

  • Monitor Regularly: With market conditions shifting rapidly in 2026, review your gross exposure at least monthly, or more frequently if you’re using leverage or trading derivatives.

Australian platforms like SelfWealth, CMC Markets, and CommSec now provide gross exposure metrics on their dashboards, making it easier than ever to keep tabs on your total risk.

Next step

Review cover options before you switch

Compare policy types, exclusions, and broker pathways with the guide still fresh in mind.

Review cover options

Newsletter

Keep the latest guides coming

Stay close to new cost guides, explainers, and planning tools without checking back manually.

Editorial process

Published by

Cockatoo Editorial Team

In-house editorial team

Publishes and updates Cockatoo’s public explainers on finance, insurance, property, home services, and provider hiring for Australians.

Borrowing and lending in AustraliaInsurance and risk coverProperty decisions and homeowner planning
View publisher profile

Reviewed by

Louis Blythe

Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

Reviews Cockatoo’s public explainers for accuracy, topical alignment, and consistency before they are surfaced as public educational content.

Editorial review and fact checkingAustralian finance and borrowing topicsInsurance and cover explainers
View reviewer profile

Keep reading

Related articles